Saturday, February 7, 2015

Syllabus

Prof. Sarah Minsloff                                                                          
sarah.minsloff@touro.edu                                                                                   
                                                                       

Romantic Poetry
Lander College for Women; T, R 2-3:15



The most unfailing herald, companion, and follower of the awakening of a great people to work a beneficial change in opinion or institution, is poetry.  –Percy Shelley, Defence of Poetry


Class Text:
Romanticism: An Anthology, ed. Duncan Wu, 4th edition

Requirements and Evaluation
Course grades are based on: attendance and class participation (25%), two essays (20% and 25%), a midterm (15%), and a final exam (15%).

Attendance and class participation: This is a discussion-oriented course in which your observations, analyses, and productive questions will determine much of the course content.  Your regular and timely attendance is therefore essential, as is your willingness to share your thoughts in discussion.  If you miss more than one class your grade will suffer.  If you are uncomfortable speaking in class, let me know and we can develop strategies for quelling anxiety.  Laptops tend to get in the way of discussion; their use in class is strongly discouraged.

Class participation includes weekly reading responses.  Each week, choose one of the poems we will be discussing on Tuesday and write a 1-2 paragraph analysis on what you find most interesting.  Responses can be informal and should be based on careful close readings of the text.  Often these responses become starting points for essays.  Responses are due to blackboard by noon on Monday. 

Essays:  Each essay will be an argument-driven analysis of one or two of the poems we have read.  The first essay, 4-5 pages, will focus on one of the first-generation poets; the second will be 6-7 pages and focus on one of the second-generation poets.  Essays must be typed in a common 12-point font, double-spaced, paginated, stapled, and labeled with your name and the date.  Papers will be penalized for each day they are late.

Calendar
Jan 27:  Course introduction
Jan 29:  Defining Romanticism

Feb 3: William Blake: Introduction (174-180), Songs of Innocence (186-197).  See illustrations at
www.blakearchive.org
Feb 5: Blake: Songs of Experience (197-212)

Feb 10: Charlotte Smith: Introduction (81-87); Elegiac Stanzas: sonnets V, XI, XII, XXXI; Beachy
Head: lines 1-49 and 167-389.
Feb 12: Introduction to Lyrical Ballads (333-338).  William Wordsworth: Preface to Lyrical Ballads (esp.
506-510, 514-515), Simon Lee, Anecdote for Fathers, We are Seven, The Thorn, The Idiot
Boy

Feb 17: Samuel Taylor Coleridge: The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, excerpt from Ch. 14 of Biographia Literaria (712-714).  Wordsworth: Note to Ancient Mariner (520)
Feb 19: “The real language of men”?: poetry of the people
Robert Southey: Introduction to The Lives and Works of Uneducated Poets (handout).  William Thom: The Mitherless Bairn (handout).  Ebenezer Elliott: from Corn Law Rhymes (handout).  Anonymous: The Oldham Weaver (handout).

Feb 24:  Wordsworth: Introduction (420-426), There was a boy, Crossing the Alps, Strange fits of passion, Three years she grew, Daffodils, The Solitary Reaper, Stepping Westward
Feb 26: Wordsworth: sonnets (545-549), Surprised by Joy, Elegiac Stanzas

March 3: Mary Robinson: Introduction (250-253), A London Summer Morning, Ode Inscribed
to the Infant Son of S. T. Coleridge, Mrs. Robinson to the Poet Coleridge, The Savage of Aveyron

March 10: Coleridge: Introduction (611-618), The Nightingale, The Eolian Harp*, This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison (633-637)*, Frost at Midnight*.  Wordsworth: Tintern Abbey
*Where the anthology prints two versions of a poem, we will discuss the later version (printed on the odd pages).
March 12: Coleridge: Of the Fragment of ‘Kubla Khan’ (639-640), Kubla Khan, Christabel,
The Pains of Sleep.  Essay 1 due at the beginning of class.

March 17: Romantic Melancholy: Smith: Sonnet XXXV, Sonnet XXXVI.  Wordsworth: Intimations Ode.  Coleridge: Dejection: An Ode. Robinson: The Snow-Drop
March 19: Midterm

March 24: Lord Byron: Introduction (862-871); Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, Canto 3, stanzas 1-7 (878-
880) and 111-118 (910-912); On this day I complete my thirty-sixth year
March 26: Byron: Don Juan, Canto 1

March 31: Byron: Don Juan, Canto 2; So we’ll go no more a-roving

Spring Break

April 14: Felicia Hemans: Introduction, The Switzer’s Wife, Joan of Arc, Juana, Costanza, Grave of a
Poetess, Homes of England, The Land of Dreams
April 16: Percy Shelley: Introduction (1070-1080), To Wordsworth, Hymn to Intellectual Beauty,
Mont Blanc, Ozymandias, England in 1819

April 21: Shelley: A Defence of Poetry, Stanzas Written in Dejection, To a Skylark, Lift not the
Painted Veil
April 23: Shelley: On Love, Music, when soft voices die, When passion’s trance is overpast, With a Guitar, to Jane.  Hemans: Porperzia Rossi, Indian Woman’s Death Song.

April 28: John Clare: Introduction (1271-1272), June, The Flitting, I am, Silent Love, O could I be,
First Love (handout), The Skylark (handout)
April 30: John Keats: Introduction (1384-1396), On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer, The
“Pleasure Thermometer” from Endymion 1.777-842 (1401-1403), Letter to his brothers (1404-1405), Letter to Reynolds (1406), Ode to Psyche

May 5: Keats: Ode on Melancholy, Letter to George and Georgiana Keats (1458), La Belle Dame
sans Merci, Bright Star
May 7: Keats: The Eve of St. Agnes, Ode on Indolence, Ode on a Grecian Urn

May 12: Shelley and Keats Odes. Shelley: Ode to the West Wind.  Keats: Ode to a Nightingale,            
To Autumn
May 14: Conclusion.  Essay 2 due at the beginning of class.

Final exam date and time TBA

Illustration is a detail from Newman & Co., engravers, Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire.  West Front. (c.1809).

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